The son of a tradesman, Wu joined the famous Peiyang Beiyang Army of Yüan Shih-k’aiYuan Shikai, the leading general of the Ch’ing Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) and the first president of the Republic of China, and rapidly rose to high position. After Yüan’s Yuan’s death in 1916, Wu became the chief bulwark of the shaky Peking Beijing government. In 1922 Wu came into conflict with Chang Tso-linZhang Zuolin, the Manchurian warlord who had begun to extend his control into North China near PekingBeijing. Wu secured his position in central China and then in a series of battles drove Chang Tso-lin’s Zhang Zuolin’s army back to its Manchurian base. As a result he became the dominant figure in North China and began to prepare for a campaign to unify all of the country by force. But his stern attitude toward his military associates and his ruthless suppression of a workers’ strike on the Hankow–Peking Beijing-Hankou Railroad in 1923 lost Wu much of his popularity, and he was never able again to consolidate his position. In 1924 Chang Tso-lin Zhang Zuolin launched a new attack and defeated Wu in a great battle battles near Tientsin.Tianjin. In 1926 Wu’s army was decisively defeated by Nationalist forces under Chiang Kai-shek (Jiang Jieshi) in Wuhan, and Wu fled to Sichuan in 1927. From 1932 until his death, Wu lived in quiet retirement in Beijing.